Re: escrowing to popularize an SC is likely to become a common business practice (i.e., a big opportunity for Escrow.com)

Future uses of my SC will include:

marketing my startup’s offerings

showcasing people (e.g., my customers)

Re: variants of said escrowing are likely to become common

Media creators of all kinds can leverage escrowing to motivate buyers, recommenders and guest-stars.

Re: my design of a next-gen variant of LinkedIn

The 1.0 site will feature:

an online market for the advertisement spaces on solo-blogger blogs (e.g., portfolio blogs)

a virtual currency (cash transactions will be supported also)

Prices in this virtual currency will contain/reflect only truthful peer ratings of work samples. Ratings of this kind are a top predictor of work performance, according to a much-cited meta-analysis of 85 years of personnel-selection research (4127 citations as of August 28, 2017). Other top predictors of work performance are often unavailable (e.g., test results). So prices in the virtual currency will be ideal for ranking people within individual job/skill categories. These rankings will make it much easier for Jane Q. Upwardly-Mobile to identify others who (can) best complement her (ditto for John Q.).

systematically spin-off many/most/all of the product-development groups that produce the complements

This spinning-off will make MOS MUCH more employee-friendly and crowdfunder-friendly than any BigCo.

— End of excerpt from prologue —

Re: MOS will excel at creating and writing SCs that help the company’s spin-offs raise equity crowdfunding

My first SC features a defining relationship-comedy premise for our time:

Re: the business case for the premise of PRC: Adver-ties will give rise to m-m-many flowmances.

For more details about the premise, see the prologue of PRC.

More about my SC expertise, via said prologue:

I have what some neuroscientists call comedy-writer brain (i.e., my neuroanatomy enables non-conscious processes of my brain to reliably identify remote associations). My business insights are products of my longtime focus on maximizing the likability of my comic persona (my focus from 1992 to 2005 was leveraging computer science and data science to expand educational and economic opportunity, and to customize education) [1]. In 2006 my focus shifted to learning how to run marketing and website-user showcasing as a profit center [2]. A key to maximizing this profit on a risk-adjusted basis is making phased investments in production values (e.g., popular serial novels become TV series) [3]. So ~95% of my focus since 2006 has been learning how to write serial novels expertly. This learning requires, on average, a decade [4]. Consistent with this average, my instincts as a serial novelist became trustworthy in 2015 [5]. All told, I’ll excel at running MOS’s analytics-savvy variant of Alloy Entertainment, the book packager that was acquired for $100M in 2012 by the Warner Brothers Television Group [6]. Re: Alloy, via a 2009 article in The New Yorker: